Thursday, May 31, 2012

Neighborhoods around the closed Muhlenberg Hospital are being leafleted.

As Plainfield's June primary election draws close (it's next Tuesday), flyers
citing 'Condition Critical' have begun circulating in the neighborhoods
surrounding the closed Muhlenberg Hospital.

The flyers are identified as from 'Residents Uniting to Save our Homes (RUSH)', a previously unheard of group.

JFK, the remaining corporate entity after Solaris Health System closed
Muhlenberg and then dissolved itself, has a proposal to build a 660-unit
apartment complex on the campus of the former critical-care hospital.
Though JFK has conducted a public relations blitz during this past
spring, formal procedures to seek city approval have not yet begun.

However, residents in the neighborhoods surrounding the closed hospital
and which would be most heavily impacted by the demolition of the
current hospital buildings and construction of a massive high rise
apartment complex in its place, have been keenly interested in -- and
opposed to -- the project, turning out for numerous meetings at which it
has been discussed.

Besides its impact on the immediate neighborhood, the whole project is
tied up with continuing questions about provision of healthcare services
in this city of 50,000. With the state mandate to keep the Satellite Emergency Department (SED) open set to expire in the summer of 2013 and a proposal by JFK to
renovate the former nursing school dormitory Kenyon House as a new,
standalone ER, concerns are quite high throughout the community.

The flyer is critical of City Council candidates Tracey Brown and
Rasheed Abdul-Haqq; Brown in particular, because she spoke in favor of
the project at the NAACP forum as providing needed 'affordable housing'.

It must be said that Brown clarified her position by the time she
appeared at the subsequent FOSH candidate forum, saying she was opposed to the
apartment proposal as it stands. (It did not mollify the audience that
she was so woefully uninformed about such a serious community issue in
the first place.)

The flyer appeals to area residents to consider the changes the project
would wreak on the quiet residential character of the neighborhoods and
suggests a negative impact on property values.

Those with long memories will recall the impact residents in the portion
of the area referred to as 'The Woods' (roughly bounded by Randolph
Road, Woodland and Park Avenues and South End Parkway) had in the debate
surrounding the erection of a new Jehovah's Witness Kingdom Hall
between South End Parkway and Sloane Boulevard a number of years ago.

The flyer urges voters to support Adrian Mapp for re-election to Ward 3
and Veronica 'Roni' Taylor for the citywide at-large seat. (The entire
section from Randolph Road to the South Plainfield line -- including
'The Woods' -- is in Ward 3.)

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Council candidate Tracey Brown refuses to discuss details of her public service.

By all accounts,
Plainfield city council candidate the Rev. Tracey Brown is a dynamic and
successful leader of a growing congregation that is engaged in service
to the community in which it is set.

And she has chosen to run for public office, a seat on the City Council
through which she would represent voters and residents citywide.

A fair question is what basis voters can use in deciding whether or not to cast a vote for Rev. Brown.

Is it because she supports President Obama's re-election bid? But all
Democrats support Obama, including Brown's opponent Roni Taylor and the
other candidates in the Democratic primary -- whether on the official
party line or not. So, that is not reason enough to decide.

Is it because she has received 'numerous proclamations and resolutions'?
How does that show voters what they will get if they vote for her?

There is one place voters look when a candidate has a record of public
service -- to their record in the public role they freely accepted.

The Rev. Tracey Brown has served both as a member of the Board of Ed and
as an appointed commissioner of the Plainfield Municipal Utilities
Authority (PMUA), yet she has declined to discuss the nuts and bolts of
her service in either capacity.

Consider that Tracey Brown has served as a
PMUA commissioner when all the following happened and she never once
raised the teeniest, tiniest voice of challenge or resistance --

Explosive growth of PMUA staff from 122 to 173 in three years (2007 - 2010);

Abuses by the Commissioners of travel, entertainment and conference expenses;

Support for annual solid waste and sewer service rate increases (this year being the exception, where interim exec Duane Young managed a slight reduction in rates -- his thanks? being bumped from consideration for the permanent position);

Refusal by the Commissioners to
meet annually with the City Council as provided for in the
Interlocal Services Agreement establishing the PMUA;

Supporting an unprecedented
four-year contract with former executives Eric Watson and David Ervine
(all previous contracts had been for one year only) that laid the ground
for an illegal $1 million settlement to them after they voluntarily
resigned;

Failing to speak out against the
illegal derailing of the arbitration process by Commissioners Dunn and
Sanders, and setting up the conditions of the $1 million cash
settlement;

Enabling the passage of the
settlement by failing to take part in the vote -- whether or not she was
able to be physically present -- which ratified the $1 million cash
settlement;

Actually proposing that PMUA workers should be forced to take unpaid furloughs in order to generate cash for the settlement to Watson and Ervin.

These are all matters of candidate
Brown's public service and relevant to how voters should decide who to
vote for in next Tuesday's primary. Yet she refuses to discuss them.
What candidate Tracey Brown fails to bring to the table is openness and
candor about the decisions she has taken as part of her public record.

At the FOSH candidate forum last week, Tracey Brown refused to take any
position that would put her at odds with Mayor Sharon Robinson-Briggs,
her friend and parishioner. All this with full knowledge that there are
many points of contention between Her Honor and the Council, involving
everything from responsible use of the public purse to fairness in
administering recreation opportunities for all the city's young people.

One can only surmise that her silence on such issues means that she
would follow Mayor Robinson-Briggs' lead on such policy issues, the
taxpaying public be damned.

In that light, it is refreshing to note that Annie McWilliams, the
current at-large councilor, who is not running for re-election endorsed
Brown's opponent Veronica 'Roni' Taylor in the following words --

...Sitting on the Plainfield City Council is not an easy job. A good
councilor must be balanced and fair in decision making. Yet, she must
be strong on those issues that are critical to Plainfield residents...A
good councilwoman must be willing to listen to all constituents,
understand all viewpoints and represent the needs of every resident.
She must also be willing to make tough decisions and face public
criticism...It is for these reasons that I am proud to endorse Roni
Taylor for Councilwoman At-Large. (See McWilliams' complete endorsement
here.)

Those who are tired of the
dysfunctionality of the Robinson-Briggs administration will do well to
consider what candidate Tracey Brown does NOT bring to the table.

'Going along to get along' cannot be a path to a better future for Plainfield.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

The Robinson-Briggs administration's sloppiness has made a messfor the Council to clean up.

Below is a personal email received from Citizen's
Budget Advisory Committee (CBAC) member Jeanette Criscione catching us
up on some of the details and the status of the 2012 budget --

I want to make you aware of the city budget and how your tax dollars are being used.

First,
some background. The Plainfield budget transitioned from a fiscal year
to a calendar year (January 1 – December 31). The budget process
starts with the mayor and the department heads preparing the budget.
The budget is sent to Trenton for review and presented to the City
Council.

The
budget was sent to Trenton, and the City was notified by the State on
April 5th that there were errors and omissions in the administration's
2012 budget, which meant that the governing body needs to find ways to
come up with an additional $1.5 million or more in revenues. A State
review of the Mayor’s budget statement introduced in March revealed the
flaws. Errors included $550,000 allocated for various kinds of
insurance when the actual amount should have been $1.7 million. In
addition, individuals were left out of the budget, including a
prosecutor and Municipal Court staff as well as police personnel.

Adjustments
must also be made for salary increases due to union settlements. The
amount of retroactive pay put in the 2011 budget was less than required.
Even 2011 employees who have since left must receive the retroactive
pay for that year.

The
administration was advised of the errors by the State on April 5th .
The budget meetings started April 12th, with neither the City Council,
nor the Citizens Budget Advisory Committee knowing about the State’s
report that that Mayor’s budget was short from $1.5 to $2.0 million
dollars.As there is a 2% cap on tax increases, the money will need to come out of surplus and budget cuts. In
light of these events, the Mayor asked for an INCREASE for her
department and she choose to fund the library with the minimum funding
required by the State, thus cutting the library’s budget by 40%. Her
reason for cutting the library was that austerity was needed in these
times.

The
Recreation department has a $775,000.00 budget, which does not include
pension and benefits. The Recreation Department reaches less than 10%
of Plainfield’s children (I am being generous with that percentage –
with the figures we have gathered it actually looks more like 1% -
4%). The YMCA has indicated that they can absorb the children into
their programs. The YMCA has tried for 3 years to reach the Recreation
Department to try to discuss shared services and they have received no
response.

Bi-lingual
Day care services 69 children. This social service, as well as
Plainfield Action Services, and Women Infants and Children, can be run
by non-profits. Many of these services are funded by grants, which are
still our tax dollars, and the Plainfield taxpayers pay for pension and
benefits for all the employees of these programs. Why does the
administration not look into relieving the citizens of this tax burden
and allow a non-profit to run it? Dudley House is an example of a
service that was on the Plainfield City pay roll, and transferred to a
non-profit. It continues to operate in Plainfield and offer services to
those who need it. Again, I am NOT talking about eliminating services,
just getting them off the city payroll.

The list goes on and on.

If
you are as outraged as I, please send your feelings to your council
member (link below provides emails, although I believe not all members
read their emails) http://plainfield.com/City_Council.htm

The mayorHon. Sharon Robinson-BriggsOffice of the Mayor515 Watchung AvenuePlainfield, NJ 07060908-753-3310 / Fax: 908-753-3634sharon.robinson-briggs@plainfield.com
And the city administratorEric BerryCity Administrator515 Watchung AvenuePlainfield, NJ 07060908-226-2571908-226-2574 (F)eric.berry@plainfieldnj.gov
[It's always a good idea to CC or BCC yourself on any email communications with public officials -- DD]

Also,
if you can, please attend the special budget meeting on May 31, where
the Finance Committee will present its recommendations to the full
council, and at another special meeting on June 6, where the council
hopes to adopt amendments (some pertaining to the budget). The council
hopes to pass the budget on June 18.

Catching up on a couple of items now that Plainfield's long holiday weekend is over --

TOWN HALL MEETING TONIGHT
Continuing its series of Town Hall meetings throughout the city, City
Council gathers with residents citywide tonight at 7:00 PM at the
Plainfield Senior Center, 400 East Front Street (mind where you park, not under the building in the rear!).

These Town Hall meetings are being
conducted throughout the community as a matter of convenience for
residents and are not intended to be for residents of the ward location
only. Councilors will take questions and concerns from residents about
any issue, so if there's an answer you need or a problem you see, come
on out and share with the Council and your neighbors.

BUDGET MEETING WEDNESDAY THURSDAY (Corrected date)
Owing to the nasty surprise delivered by the Robinson-Briggs
administration last week that the its budget proposal is riddled with
gaps, omissions and errors, the City Council has felt the need to set a
special extra budget hearing meeting before wrestling with the question
of amendments.

The special deliberation will take
place Wednesday, May 30 Thursday, May 31 (date corrected), at 7:00 PM in City Hall Library. One of the
features of the budget deliberations is that once the Council has
interviewed officials or discussed an issue, the members of the Citizens
Budget Advisory Commission are asked to weigh in with their
observations and opinions.

Given the mess the Robinson-Briggs
administration had made of things this year, you will want to hear the
Council's thinking on how it is going to pull Robinson-Briggs' chestnuts
out of the fire.

Monday, May 28, 2012

What better time than Memorial Day weekend for Plainfield shutterbugs to begin snapping away for the Plainfield Public Library's 2012 photo contest -- especially when the theme is 'Plainfield: Eating Out, Eating In'?

After all, the weekend kicks off the summer season of barbecues, picnics
and outdoor receptions, all of which are rich grounds for snapshot
prowling.

But don't let your photos be limited to outdoor activities, it's a
wholly food thing: Indoors, outdoors; at home, in restaurants or at
festivals; shopping, prepping, cooking and eating.

For entry forms and guidelines, see the Library's photo contest page here.

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Hillside Cemetery's GAR Bivouac is a circle where Union veteransof the Civil War are buried, including four Plainfielder who served in the U.S. Colored Infantry.

As Plainfield prepares to honor once again its war dead, it
bears remembering that we owe this national day of reflection to the
custom begun by Black freedmen in Charleston, South Carolina in 1865.

David W. Blight, a history professor at Yale, has written up the story
of the first Decoration Day (as Memorial Day was once known), in which
10,000 freed Blacks in Charleston rallied at the former slaveholders'
race track to honor the Union soldiers who died there when it had been
made an outdoor prison. You can read Blight's telling of the story here or watch the YouTube video below.

Though there were 'Decoration Days'
celebrated at various cemeteries on various dates in the spring of each
year, the Charleston celebration seems to have been the impetus to which
we can trace our Memorial Day.

Hillside Cemetery has a GAR Circle, where Plainfielders who served in the Civil War
are laid to rest, among them Prince Carmen, Martin Herling, Enoch
Milford and George Sutphen, all members of the 'U.S. Colored Infantry'.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

The flagpole at 7th and Watchung is a memorial to those who died in WWI.

An UPDATE to the Courier's online Memorial Day listings Friday afternoon now shows the following information for Plainfield --

A Memorial Day Day service will be hosted by VFW Post 7474 and American
Legion Post 219. It will begin at 9:30 a.m. with the annual
wreath-laying ceremony at Plainfield City Hall, followed at 9:45 a.m.
with a flag-raising at the World War I memorial at Seventh Street and
Watchung Avenue, and then a 10 a.m. prayer service at St. Mary Parish at
Sixth and Liberty streets.

There is still no notice on the City's website.

The newspapers list voluminous details on ceremonies in central New Jersey communities (see the Courier here, the Ledger here) -- now including informationfor Plainfield.

For the history of Memorial Day and Plainfield's War Memorial flagpole, see previous posts here --

Friday, May 25, 2012

Plainfield's budget mess caused my phone to light up Thursday evening.
The question now is: Should heads roll over the surprise $1.5 million budget
shortfall?

Though I decided not to go to Thursday's budget hearing, I got an earful
afterward, when it came to light that the state had flagged the
submitted budget for errors and that the Robinson-Briggs administration
had known about it since April 5 -- without telling the Council, the
Citizens Budget Advisory Committee, and maybe even its own budget
consultant (and former acting city administrator) David Kochel.

For the skinny from one who attended the meeting, see Bernice's report here,
where she details the E&O's (realestatespeak for 'errors and
omissions'): personnel left out of the budget, salary increases not
taken into account, insurance premiums incorrectly calculated and more.

And then there is the matter of the $5 million deferred pension payment
due this year. (Mayor Robinson-Briggs opted in 2009 to defer a then-due
pension payment until 2012 -- guess what, it's now 2012 and the money is
due. Surprise!) How that will be handled is still not clear.

On top of all this, the honchos are absent: City Administrator Eric
Berry is 'off until June 2' and Director of Administration and Finance
Al Restaino is out due to his mother's surgery (though it is doubtful
either would have been helpful; Restaino never has the answer to any
question he is asked, and Berry always does a Hail Mary pass to someone else).

The budget proposal is arguably the most important item the Mayor is
responsible for from year to year; it is what ensures the wheels go
around -- for everything from salaries for secret employees like Mr.
Muhammad to cellophane-wrapped candies for visitors waiting in her
reception area.

The biggest load the Mayor's chief assistant, the City Administrator,
must lift each year is assembling and shepherding the annual budget to
passage by the City Council. Bar none.

How could Mayor Robinson-Briggs let the man take off at this crucial
time? How could she hope to have a successful outcome to the budget
process if someone fully prepared and fully informed weren't available
for the Council's deliberations? (Mr. Jackson is a good soldier for
stepping into the breach, but Berry and Mayor Robinson-Briggs are
ultimately responsible.)

Worse still, if the Robinson-Briggs administration knew by April 5 of
the state's questions about errors in the proposed budget, why is the
Council finding out on May 24?

Did Mayor Robinson-Briggs keep her own budget consultant Dave Kochel in
the dark also? Kochel is an honorable man and I find it difficult to
believe he would have spent weeks at the Council's deliberations without
bringing such relevant information to light -- if he knew about it.

Did City Administrator Berry know about the shortfall and decide to keep it from the Council? Or was he equally in the dark?

I have been told in the past that important documents come to City Hall
addressed to Mayor Robinson-Briggs and then sit on her desk unread and
unresponded to for weeks. Is it possible that the issues with the budget
have been sitting on her desk in plain sight while she has been busy
prancing and posturing about less important matters?

In any event, the budget process is delayed, the budget now exceeds the
state's allowable increase cap (2%), too much of the year is past for
much savings from trimming the budget, and the Council is left to
resolve the Mayor's mess.

Whose head should roll for this incompetence? Berry's? Restaino's? Or Mayor Robinson-Briggs'?

The flagpole at 7th and Watchung is a memorial to those who died in WWI.

An UPDATE to the Courier's online Memorial Day listings this afternoon now shows the following information for Plainfield --

A Memorial Day Day service will be hosted by VFW Post 7474 and American
Legion Post 219. It will begin at 9:30 a.m. with the annual
wreath-laying ceremony at Plainfield City Hall, followed at 9:45 a.m.
with a flag-raising at the World War I memorial at Seventh Street and
Watchung Avenue, and then a 10 a.m. prayer service at St. Mary Parish at
Sixth and Liberty streets.

There is still no notice on the City's website.

The newspapers list voluminous details on ceremonies in central New Jersey communities (see the Courier here, the Ledger here) -- now including informationfor Plainfield.

For the history of Memorial Day and Plainfield's War Memorial flagpole, see previous posts here --

Thursday, May 24, 2012

For much of the evening, candidate Rev. Tracey Brown frowned and scowled.

The
Rev. Tracey Brown, who was given the Democratic party's line for the citywide at-large Council seat in the
June primary, refused to discuss her role as a Plainfield Municipal
Utilities Authority (PMUA) commissioner at Wednesday evening's candidate
forum.

Sponsored by FOSH (Friends of Sleepy Hollow) and moderated by League of
Women Voters state vice president Dawne Clarke, Brown and the other
three candidates answered questions from the capacity audience at the
Emerson School cafetorium.

Brown, who appeared uncomfortable much of the time, was in desperate
need of a smile transplant as she frowned and scowled her way through
the evening.

As each candidate gave their opening remarks, including the obligatory
summary of the candidate's experience in public service, I noticed that
Brown, who has been a PMUA Commissioner for about six years or so,
omitted any reference to the PMUA among her lengthy list of activities
and honors.

The second question addressed to the candidates concerned the PMUA (the
first had been about the fate of the Muhlenberg property), which Brown
declined to answer, saying that on advice of an attorney she would not
answer as there was 'a conflict of interest'.

Nonplussed, moderator Clarke asked the other candidates if they could
explain what the conflict might be. Veronica 'Roni' Taylor, who opposes
Brown for the citywide at-large slot asked how someone could run for
public office without answering questions about their public service.
Mapp said he was constantly asked questions about his actions as an
elected official.

Brown would not budge, nor would she define what the supposed 'conflict' was, except to eventually say that she had voted for arbitration (of the separation issues).

To my mind, this is a bogus position.

It is beyond the pale to ask voters to give you a seat at the table of
the governing body and to mark off areas of your experience as off
limits to questions.

Everyone who follows public meetings understands there are items that
are temporarily off limits until they are settled (contract
negotiations, lawsuits, personnel actions), but once settled they become
part of the public record along with any comments and votes taken by
the participants in open public meetings.

The notion that one's actions in discharging one's public duties would be beyond inquiry boggles the mind.

Among the questions I am sure voters would find of interest are --

Brown's role in the approval of the contract which made it possible for
former executives Watson and Ervin to walk away with over $1 million of
the ratepayers money;

Her non-participation in the settlement vote (though she was not
present, she apparently made no effort to participate by phone as her
friend and supporter Councilor Bridget Rivers so frequently does with
City Council business);

Her role in proposing that PMUA employees take unpaid furloughs to generate the cash necessary to make the $1 million payments.

But her PMUA record was not the only place Brown came up short.

Where candidates Taylor and Mapp were able to cite their direct
experience with problems of governance (the school board in Taylor's
case, the Council in Mapp's), Brown's answers to questions of policy and
long-term issues had a vague and sketchy air to them.

She repeatedly said 'there are grants for' such things as divergent as
road repairs, summer youth employment, a youth center and a shelter for
victims of domestic violence. Anyone who has been paying any attention
to government funding of programs over the past several years knows that
the money has become scarcer, harder to qualify for and funded in
smaller amounts if an agency is lucky enough to be funded at all (Brown
never touched on why, with such monies allegedly available, her friend
Mayor Robinson-Briggs has not taken advantage of it, nor, for that
matter, why she has not led her church to take on some of these
projects). All of which made Brown's proposals somewhat surreal to those
who know the actual situation. The danger is that uninformed voters
might be duped by such talk.

On the question of disposition of the Muhlenberg property, Brown waved a
packet of papers, saying she had done her 'due diligence' since
Sunday's NAACP forum and that she was opposed to the proposal for
600-plus rental units at the site.

However, when it came to Mayor Robinson-Briggs' proposal to cut the
Plainfield Public Library's funding by 40 percent, Brown's comments
revealed an appalling lack of understanding of the Library's importance
to the community. Her suggestion that it was a matter of trimming the
Library's budget or laying off police also showed that she was
uninformed about the budget proposal currently under consideration by
the Council and which does not include any layoff proposal.

Ignorance of the issues facing the Robinson-Briggs administration and the City Council is not a confidence builder.

This was further compounded by a question concerning how service on the
governing body would affect each candidate's personal life.

Brown said she had pulled together a meeting of her church's board and
some members and had gotten their support. She said that she currently
has two meetings per month (as a PMUA commissioner) and was prepared for
that kind of a schedule as a Council member.

She would be quickly disabused of such simplistic notions once she had
her first Council meeting that ran into the wee hours of the next day.
Not to mention mandatory service on two or more Council committees, and
duties as the liaison to one or more community agencies (such as the
PMUA), training as an elected official, and the mandatory baby-kissing
and ribbon-cutting duties.

It would not be long before either Brown or her parishioners would
question the time needed to fulfill a Council commitment responsibly.

(There is at least one member of her church who does not see things her
way, thinking there should be a separation between church and politics.
And there are other churchgoers who are willing to make an allowance for
a minister without a congregation to have a political role but draw the
line at an active pastor whose responsibility to a congregation's is a
24x7 obligation.)

Thankfully, the city's cable channel crew, under the leadership of Lamar
Mackson, was on hand and taped the complete event. You should be able
to view it shortly and can draw your own conclusions.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Why is Plainfield's Republican 'king maker' organizing support for this Democrat?

Many
Plainfielders are intrigued that Republican 'king maker' John Campbell
is backing the run of community activist Rasheed Abdul-Haqq as a
challenger to incumbent Adrian Mapp for the Ward 3 Democratic nomination
in the June 5 Primary election.

In fact, Republican Campbell is serving as chairperson of Abdul-Haqq's
Democratic campaign committee, according to papers filed with the
state's Election Law Enforcement Commission (see here,
especially form R-1). Though unusual, there is nothing wrong here; it's
just another indication of the spaghetti bowl that is Plainfield
politics.

At first glance, one might guess that Abdul-Haqq's run has to do with
his forced displacement from the Board of Ed by dint of legislation
personally crafted by his old nemesis, Assemblyman Jerry Green. Indeed,
there is no love lost between the two, and Abdul-Haqq has needled Green
for years.

Green, as chairperson of the Plainfield Democratic City Committee, has given the Ward 3 line to incumbent Council President Adrian
Mapp and Abdul-Haqq now resides in Ward 3, ergo Abdul-Haqq can get back
at Green by challenging the regular party's candidate, no?

But this is Plainfield, and that scenario would be too simple.

Why Campbell as Abdul-Haqq's chairperson? That's the real question.

Suppose Campbell recruited Abdul-Haqq and not the other way around. And
also suppose that Campbell has a score to settle -- with Mapp, and not
with Green.

That would mean that Abdul-Haqq is being played like a chess piece.

Consider these points--

Campbell and Green have been partners before:
In 2004, Campbell and Green were the largest individual contributors
($2,000 each) to the school board campaign of a team that included
Campbell's wife Wilma, longtime Green operative Barbara James and
then-newbie the Rev. Tracey Brown;

Campbell and Abdul-Haqq attended a fundraiser for Green's candidate Tracey Brown:
Campbell and Abdul-Haqq recently attended a fundraiser for Green's
candidate for the citywide at-large seat at the Spain Inn, and were seen
by all yukking it up with Mayor Sharon Robinson-Briggs, whose pastor
and best friend Brown is, and Assemblyman Green;

That score Campbell has to settle with Mapp:
Campbell has told others that he was miffed at Mapp for making an issue
of the PMUA (Plainfield Municipal Utilities Authority) when he last ran
for office, putting unwanted attention and heat on another of
Campbell's old pals, former PMUA executive director Eric Watson.

Add to this the fact that Mayor Robinson-Briggs, herself a former Republican operative, has been campaigning on behalf of her pastor Rev. Tracey Brown AND Abdul-Haqq and you have a 'spaghetti bowl' worthy of Plainfield politics at its most convoluted.

Meanwhile, the good Rev. Brown has been sitting as a PMUA commissioner
for years now, without speaking out against the excesses and abuses of
that agency's executives, including Campbell's old pal, former PMUA executive director Eric Watson, who got a $1 million separation package through Rev. Brown's connivance.

And she is running for the citywide at-large Council seat, apparently with the blessing of Mr. Campbell.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

With the June Primary just two weeks away, Wednesday evening provides
the last chance for voters to quiz all four Democratic candidates
together before the election.

In a town where the outcome of the Democratic primary pretty much
determines the November election, this is an important opportunity --
especially for those concerned about the 3-ring circus that is the
Robinson-Briggs administration and its Council allies.

The forum for the whole community, sponsored by FOSH and Netherwood
Neighbors, gets under way at 7:00 PM at the Emerson Community School. It
will be moderated by League of Woman Voters member Dawne Clarke and
conducted according to League procedures. Clarke is familiar to many
Plainfielders from having moderated LWV forums here before.

Candidates are incumbent Councilor Adrian Mapp and challenger Rasheed
Abdul-Haqq for the Ward 3 seat and PMUA Commissioner Tracey Brown and
former long-time Board of Ed member Veronica 'Roni' Taylor for the
Citywide at-large seat (incumbent Annie McWilliams is going to graduate
school and decided not to run again).

Voters will want to hear the candidates for themselves, especially since
it's been reported that PMUA Commissioner Brown attacked her running
mate Adrian Mapp at the NAACP candidate forum this past Sunday.

Brown also reportedly refused to discuss her role as a PMUA Commissioner
-- especially concerning the $1 million settlement with former
executives Eric Watson and David Ervin brokered by fellow commissioners
Malcolm Dunn and Cecil Sanders.

Because there is no contested primary on the Republican side of the
ballot, candidates Bill Amirault (At-large) and Randy Bullock (Ward 3)
will be acknowledged if they are present (Bullock is recovering from
recent surgery and is not expected to attend).

City Council Candidates Forum
Sponsored by
Friends of Sleepy Hollow
and Netherwood Neighbors

Wednesday, May 23, 7:00 PM
Emerson Community School
East 3rd Street and Emerson Avenue
(Parking in the school lot on Emerson and on the street)

Something to delight everyone can be found at today's annual Garage Sale.

Thousands of visitors are expected to flood Plainfield today for the FOSH/VWB Garage Sale which runs from 9 AM to 4 PM.

One hundred homes have signed up to participate. Homes can be spotted
easily by the balloons flying at the curb. Maps will be available at each
site.

While many are individual homeowners offering personal stuff, several
sites are always dedicated to raising money for a favorite charity or
cause, such as animal rescue programs, the Plainfield Symphony and other organizations.

In addition to the many homes in the Sleepy Hollow area that are
participating, a number of locations in the Van Wyck Brooks Historic
Disrict have signed on in this year's joint effort.

A good place to start would be along Watchung or Central Avenues and then use one of the maps to scout out the rest.

NOTE: Upper Watchung Avenue is in the process of being readied for
repaving, so mind the edges of the street, which have gravel fill for
now. Spike heels are definitely NOT recommended!

Saturday, May 19, 2012

As Plainfielders head into official 'summer' at the end of the month, the calendar is crowded with must-do events.

Today includes three such --

League of Women Voters voter project

Plainfield's
chapter of the LWV offers two workshops today on registering to vote,
and what to expect if you are a new voter. The workshops are identical,
10 - 11:30 AM and Noon - 1:30 PM. Lunch will be served from 11:20 to
Noon. At Plainfield High School, 950 Park Avenue. Special guest: Joanne
Rajoppi, Union County Clerk.

School Superintendent candidates forum

The
Board of Ed will present the two finalists for the vacant
Superintendent's position. Each will make a presentation and take
questions from the public. Though the Board has refused to make the
names public, word in the street is that the Interim Super, Anna Belin
Pyles, is one of the two finalists. At Emerson Community School, East
3rd Street and Emerson Avenue. 1 - 3 PM.

Wine Tasting at the Library

The
Friends of the Plainfield Public Library present their 10th annual wine
tasting event from 4 - 7 PM this afternoon at the Library. Special
wines, special music, special eats! See separate story "Live jazz highlights Library's wine tasting event".

Friday, May 18, 2012

Jazz legend
Carrie Jackson will headline the Plainfield Public Library's
annual 'Wine Discovery' wine tasting event this Saturday
at the Library from 4 to 7 PM.

Usually also showcasing one of Plainfield's grand homes, this year's
event -- the 10th annual tasting -- will be at the Plainfield Public
Library itself, where the award-winning new Rain Forest-themed
Children's Room will be featured.

Ms. Jackson and her Jazzin' All-Star Tio will be performing poolside in
the Library's signature atrium, which will serve as one of three tasting
stations for the event.

Plainfield's own Harry Ailster will perform Gershwin favorites in a café
setting in the Anne Louise Davis room, where a photography exhibit of East Coast blues musicians currently graces the walls.

The PAAAS Jazz Octet debuted at January's Friends' annual meeting.

The third tasting station, in the Reading Rainforest, will feature the PAAAS Jazz Ensemble. This octet of students at the
Plainfield school district's Plainfield Academy for the Arts and
Advanced Studiesfeatures tenor and alto saxes, trumpet,
trombone, bass, piano, drums and guitar.
Under the leadership of director Greg Williams, who is also mentor,
coach and champion, the young men made their debut in January at the
annual meeting of the Friends of the Plainfield Public Library (FOPPL).

This year's tastings will highlight the wines and wineries of New
Jersey, including two Pinot Grigios, a Riesling and a Barbera. The
buffet will feature fancy hors d'oeuvres, entrees and desserts.

Sponsored by FOPPL, the annual event raises funds in support of Library programs. This year's projects include --

Thursday, May 17, 2012

It has felt like
I plateaued after getting home from Plainfield's Norwood Terrace rehab
center just a month ago, but now things are beginning to move again and I
have to get to work on finding another [used] car, since one cannot
drive a stick shift in NJ with a prosthesis.

And it occurs to me that Plainfield Today readers may be aware of deals
that I should look into (or maybe even have been thinking of getting rid
of their own older car).

So, here are some of the ideas I have in mind -- you can email me (click here) privately if you don't want to leave a public comment...and, as always, I thank you...

GAS MISERS ARE GOOD

BELLS & WHISTLES UNIMPORTANT

EASY HANDLING KEY

WILL CONSIDER MULTI-PURPOSE

BUT NOT TOO COMPACT

LOW RIDERS?

I am partial to low riders (with blue under-belly lighting), but ammindful that Plainfield still suffers from potholes.

Interested in
my stick shift? It's a peppy little 4-cylinder 2001 Toyota Echo in good shape, with 175,000
miles (my last Toyota was totaled in my driveway and had 280,000 miles
-- I was shooting for 300,000). Let me know.

Plainfield resident since 1983. Retired as the city's Public Information Officer in 2006; prior to that Community Programs Coordinator for the Plainfield Public Library. Founding member and past president of: Faith, Bricks & Mortar; Residents Supporting Victorian Plainfield; and PCO (the outreach nonprofit of Grace Episcopal Church). Supporter of the Library, Symphony and Historic Society as well as other community groups, and active in Democratic politics.